Amor, Dolor y Lágrimas (Love, Pain, and Tears) flow from the heart of the Mexican mariachi when it plays música ranchera, Mexico’s soulful "country music." Riding the wave of mass media beginning in the 1930s, música ranchera became the single most popular vein of Mexican music by the 1950s. GRAMMY-winning M...

Amor, Dolor y Lágrimas (Love, Pain, and Tears) flow from the heart of the Mexican mariachi when it plays música ranchera, Mexico’s soulful "country music." Riding the wave of mass media beginning in the 1930s, música ranchera became the single most popular vein of Mexican music by the 1950s. GRAMMY-winning Mariachi Los Camperos de Nati Cano breathes new life into classic soul-baring rancheras and boleros in this back-to-the-future rec...Amor, Dolor y Lágrimas (Love, Pain, and Tears) flow from the heart of the Mexican mariachi when it plays música ranchera, Mexico’s soulful "country music." Riding the wave of mass media beginning in the 1930s, música ranchera became the single most popular vein of Mexican music by the 1950s. GRAMMY-winning Mariachi Los Camperos de Nati Cano breathes new life into classic soul-baring rancheras and boleros in this back-to-the-future recording. 47 minutes, 13 tracks, 32-page booklet, extensive notes, photos.
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"We want to keep the flavor of what our ancestors did at their danzas," says Roberto Martínez, founder of M.O.R.E. (Minority Owned Record Enterprises) and director of Los Reyes de Albuquerque (The Kings of Albuquerque), a musical group formed in the early sixties in Albuquerque, New Mexico. In this album, they pe...

"We want to keep the flavor of what our ancestors did at their danzas," says Roberto Martínez, founder of M.O.R.E. (Minority Owned Record Enterprises) and director of Los Reyes de Albuquerque (The Kings of Albuquerque), a musical group formed in the early sixties in Albuquerque, New Mexico. In this album, they perform a variety of traditional genres such as corridos, polkas and canción ranchera from northern New Mexico and southern Colorado, ac...

"We want to keep the flavor of what our ancestors did at their danzas," says Roberto Martínez, founder of M.O.R.E. (Minority Owned Record Enterprises) and director of Los Reyes de Albuquerque (The Kings of Albuquerque), a musical group formed in the early sixties in Albuquerque, New Mexico. In this album, they perform a variety of traditional genres such as corridos, polkas and canción ranchera from northern New Mexico and southern Colorado, accompanied by trumpet, violins, vihuela, guitar, and guitarrón.